LONDON (Reuters) - A 99-year-old woman left her last will and testament scrawled on the edge of the British newspaper crossword puzzle she solved every day. „I leave all my money and possessions to Len (her nephew) and I hope he will be happy as long as he lives. God bless you, Aunty Nettie. Goodbye,“ life-long crossword addict Anetta Duel wrote on her Daily Telegraph puzzle. Leonard Andrean told the paper: „Our aunt was mentally active until she died and it seems that when she decided to make her will the only available paper on which she could write was her crossword puzzle.“ A legal expert said: „The will is handwritten and signed and need not to be witnessed for it to be valid. It would of course be rendered invalid if a subsequent will were to be found.“